It is true that this tax-deed is regular in form, but there is no connection between the description in it and any to be found in the assessment roll; and it has been held by the supreme court of Florida that the limitation section does not prevent a suit by the owner to recover lands after the lapse of a year, when 'the calls in the deed of the clerk are materially different from the lands described on the assessment roll, and sold by the collector.' Carucross v. Lykes, 22 Fla. 587. In that case it appeared that on the assessment roll the land was described as 'blocks 10, 12, 13, and 16,' while the deed purported to convey 'blocks 10, 12, and 13, in the town of Tampa, and according to the general map of said town.' In the opinion the court said: 'The description of the land on the assessment roll is an important element in the purchaser's title, and it must be sold by the collector and deeded by the clerk in accordance with such description. * * * The statute was intended to prevent, after the lapse of a year, suits by the former owner for recovery of lands upon technical grounds, for informalities and irregularities in the proceedings. It contemplated that the deed of the clerk alluded to would be to lands assessed, and none other. The clerk can only make a deed to the lands sold by the collector. The collector can only sell the lands as described in the assessment roll. * * * Section 20, above, only extends its protection to the lands assessed, because if other lands, or lands differing materially in description, are deeded by the clerk, the deed 'is not a deed made in pursuance of a sale of land for taxes,' nor is a suit for the recovery of possession thereof a suit for lands sold for taxes.'

In Grissom v. Furman, 22 Fla. 581, the difference between the description on the assessment roll and in the tax-deed consisted simply in a reversal in the numbers of the township and range, the former being 'township 21, range 11,' and the latter, 'township 11, range 21;' but it was held that the deed was a nullity. In Townsend v. Edwards, 25 Fla. 582, 6 South. Rep. 212, the tax-deed being regular in form, the trial court had refused to permit the introduction of the assessment roll in evidence. The supreme court reversed the judgment, on the ground of error in that ruling, thus reaffirming the cases in 22 Fla. In Sloan v. Sloan, 25 Fla. 53, 5 South. Rep. 603, an action to remove a cloud upon the title, which cloud consisted in a tax-deed, it appeared that this deed was regular in form; but it having been alleged and proved that the assessment was made by the collector of revenue, and not by the assessor of taxes, it was held that the deed was voidable, and was not within the protection of the limitation section heretofore referred to. The court observed: 'If the lands were assessed on the roll when it went into the hands of the collector, the owner was presumed to know it, and if he did not pay the taxes, and a sale was made and a deed executed, he was also charged with notice of the consequences which the statute imposed upon him. If the lands were not upon such roll, he was likewise presumed to know it, and that the only consequence was that they would be assessed the next year as well for that as for the preceding year; but the law did not call upon him to anticipate either an assessment or sale by the collector, or subject him to the provisions of the sixty-third section on account of such assessment or sale. This tax-deed is not within the protection of the sixty-third section, but is a cloud upon the land described in it.' In Kansas, a like ruling has been made as to the necessity of a conformity of the description in the tax-deed to that on the assessment roll, (Hewitt v. Storch, 31 Kan. 488, 2 Pac. Rep. 556,) which ruling was followed by this court in a case coming from that state, (Stout v. Mastin, 139 U.S. 151, 11 Sup. Ct. Rep. 519.) It follows, therefore, that on the face of the record there was disclosed no assessment or sale of the lands described in the deed, and the latter must fall within the condemnation of the cases referred to.

But there was testimony tending to show that the tract in controversy was sometimes called in the community the 'Alexander Spring Creek Grant,' and it is contended by plaintiff in error that an assessment by this description was sufficient, and sustains a deed describing the land with official accuracy. We cannot assent to this proposition. The land was not known to the state or United States records by any such description. A history of the title will be instructive. While Florida was still a Spanish province, and on the 15th of September, 1817, Antonio Huertas petitioned the governor of the province for a grant of 15,000 acres, which petition was on the same day sustained, and a decree entered that such a grant be made. On the 13th of December, 1820, he petitioned for a survey of the grant in four parcels, one being of 10,400 acres, which was approved and the survey made. After the annexation of Florida, and prior to the year 1873, by proper proceedings in the federal court, under the authority of the acts of congress, the title to this tract of 10,400 acres was confirmed to Moses E. Levy, and a survey thereof made and approved by the surveyor general of the United States for that state. To wnship and range lines were run through the tract according to the general rules for the survey of public lands of the United States, though it does not appear that the boundaries of these lands as surveyed conform fully to such lines. So, upon the face of the United States records, the land was known either as the Moses E. Levy part of the Huertas grant, or as described by the survey, or by the township and range numbers

Now, the second clause of section 17, c. 1713, Laws 1869, in reference to assessments, requires: 'A description of each tract or parcel of land to be taxed, specifying, under appropriate heads, the township, range, and section in which the land lies, or, if divided into lots and blocks, then the numbers of the lot and block, and the full cash value of each lot, tract, or parcel, such value to be taken from the tax-payer under oath.'

And section 20 of the same chapter provides:

'If the land assessed be less or other than a subdivision according to the United States survey, and unless the sme is divided in lots and blocks so that it can thereby be definitely described, it shall be described by the boundaries thereof, or in such other manner as to make the description as definite as may be.'

This land having been surveyed, the separate townships and ranges might have been stated; or if it was all to be assessed as one tract, and the description by the boundaries was too long for insertion, then the description by the name known to the records, and which would impart notice to the owner, should have been used. The owner, as the Florida supreme court has repeatedly held, has a right to rely upon the assessment roll, and, if his land be not upon it, to assume that it will not be sold, but, on the contrary, is liable to be placed upon the roll of the succeeding year. But is he bound to hunt through the assessment roll, beyond the proper official description, to see if his land may not be found described by some term which is more or less commonly used in the community?

Further, this tract was one of about 10,000 acres; the original petition was for a tract of 10,400 acres; the United States survey made it 10,457.34 acres; but the tract here assessed was only one of 7,800 acres. While accuracy in the number of acres may not be vital, yet so large a variation indicates that anouther tract was intended, or that only a part of this tract (and which part is not indicated) was assessed, either of which was fatal.

Still further, the law required that the assessment should be in the name of the owner or occupant, with a proviso that, if the land be unoccupied, it might be to 'unknown owner.' Laws 1869, c. 1713, §§ 6, 7, 17, 19. These lands were assessed to Mazell, Partin & Partin. There is no pretense that they, or either of them, ever had any title to or possession of, or connection with, the land. Under such circumstances, it has been held by the supreme court of Florida that the assessment is a nullity, and that no title passes by the sale. L'Engle v. Railroad Co., 21 Fla. 353; L'Engle v. Wilson, 21 Fla. 461. In the latter of these cases the assessment was made to the 'estate of Parkhurst,' and it was held that it and the sale based thereon were void. The court was urged to hold that the provisions of the statute in this respect were directory, but it declined to so hold, and ruled that they were imperative. In the former of the case the assessment was in the name of W. L. Seymour, who claimed title under a foreclosure sale, but, as it appeared that such foreclosure sale had passed no title, it was ruled that both assessment and sale were worthless. In its opinion the court said: 'The tax is a lien on the land only when legally assessed. This lien attaches and has relation to the time at which the assessment was made. Spratt v. Price, 18 Fla. 289. We hold that a valid assessment of the land, in accordance with the laws regulating assessments, (chapter 3099, Laws Fla. Acts 1879,)-and the law in this respect was similar to that of 1869,-is necessary and indispensable to make good the title of a purchaser at a tax-sale; without such assessment, no lien attaches to the land. An assessment, therefore, of lands to a person other than the owner, such person not being the occupant thereof, is not a valid assessment, and the purchaser at a tax-sale based on such assessment takes no title.'

So it appears that this land was not assessed to the owner or occupant, or to an unknown owner. It was not assessed by any official or accurate description. Within the decisions, therefore, of the supreme court of Florida, the sale and deed were nullities, and beyond the protecting influence of the limitation statute.